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Does the site change frequently as to which pages it contains? If not then simply creating the site map manually should do (or use one of the many online sitemap generators such as https://www.xml-sitemaps.com/ )

If the pages change frequently then you will need to install a script that updates the sitemap on a regular basis.

An XML Sitemap is a structured format that a user doesn't need to see, but it tells the search engine about the pages in your site, their relative importance to each other, and how often (frequently) they are updated.

Does the site change frequently as to which pages it contains? If not then simply creating the site map manually should do (or use one of the many online sitemap generators such as https://www.xml-sitemaps.com/ )

If the pages change frequently then you will need to install a script that updates the sitemap on a regular basis.

You should use the full version (about $10-15). It will create your owning sitemap with full of page in your website. Besides, it also update your XML site map frequently

One thing to remember is that XML sitemaps -- despite being something Google pretty much came up with -- are hoodoo-voodoo nonsense. If all the pages on your site are properly linked to / crosslinked, search engines WILL find the pages on the site making a sitemap a pointless redundancy and an utter/complete waste of your time and effort.

Naturally being a pointless redundancy and waste of time and effort, you'll find plenty of people offering to charge you for their "service" of doing it for you -- which more often than not does indeed involve "servicing the client" -- and not in a good way.

If your site is anywhere NEAR properly built, don't even bother with the XML sitemap rubbish... and if it's not properly built all the sitemap does is dump a can of shellac on a pile. No matter how much you shine it...

“There are two ways of constructing a software design: One way is to make it so simple that there are obviously no deficiencies and the other way is to make it so complicated that there are no obvious deficiencies.” – C.A.R. Hoare, The 1980 ACM Turing Award Lecturehttp://www.cutcodedown.com